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Thanks for the info. Right now I'm just assuming the rifle is shooting point of aim with the front sight aligned all the way to the right. I'm betting it didn't come that way from the CMP
and that the previous owner had it dialed in. I'm afraid of the barrel being out of index, but this is all just speculation on my part until I can get out to the range, of course.
One more question. Suppose I center the front sight and then the rear sight then needs 5 click to the right to be centered on target, is there a way to make that adjustment the center on the windage dial?
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01-31-2014 04:28 PM
# ADS
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The front sight was set at the factory, and John Garand
intended that all adjustments should be made from the rear sight. That's why a sight seal covered the front screw in early M1s. Competitive shooters who know what the are doing, however, sometimes adjust the front sight if it is too far off center.
Real men measure once and cut.
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Mine was 12 clicks left of center for a NWZ. The barrel had to be reindexed and now it is 1 click of center for a NWZ. For 200 yards mine is 7 clicks up from the bottom shooting 110 grain Sierra HP's over 48 grains of Accurate 2495 and a CCI 200.
Dave
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I have found they seem to be out of index quite regularly, the ones that came from the Danes anyway. Not really the US guns. I have the wrenches and dial indicator, I just do them myself now. It doesn't take long and you can check everything at once then.
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wineman OT
Sandwiches and Pinot Noir for lunch on he porch today... Rochioli Chardonnay to start, then:
Calera Ryan
Maritnelli Lolita
WH Smith Hellenthal
Chocolates and 2003 Graham port for dessert... can I go to sleep now? the Hellenhal was the clear winner, rated it 96, but the loser got 94
Real men measure once and cut.
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Thank You to Bob Seijas For This Useful Post:
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Bob,
Don't know the WH Smith. Years ago Dick Graff from Chalone (before the sell out) flew up to Eastern Washington and stayed with me. A really neat guy. The end result was the Canoe Ridge project. Unfortunately his life ended when he misjudged a landing at Chalone. Another Pinot I like is the Au Bon Climat from SB.
Dave
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13 clicks was only a starting point, all rifles are different. Average elevation is 9-11 clicks and we started from there. One guy needed 28 clicks to get a zero, others went the other way and ended up at 2 or 3.
True if you are firing the rifle for the first time on the rifle range. You could start with whatever it took to put a round on paper at a certain range. As far as the term
"Battle Sights", as I recall, that is the setting you use in a combat situation when the distance of the potential target is unknown. Take the article you wrote for the Summer 2012 GCA
Journal about Hector Cafferata. In a "battle" such as Pvt. Cafferata found himself in, most of his shots were up close and personal. As Hector said " you just put the front sight on them, pulled the trigger, and down they went". No time to worry about changing sight settings. Long range shots would be left to snipers for the most part.
Last edited by Joe W; 02-02-2014 at 06:17 PM.
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Combat
Exactly right, Joe. Battle Sight Zero was intended to allow the rifleman to engage "man-sized targets" at all ranges from 50 - 400 yards by aiming center mass. It's rough and certainly not designed for competitive precise shooting. It's called "Battle Sight" zero for a reason.
Real men measure once and cut.
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It seems that most Euro/Soviet
rifles have the "Battle Sight" set at the lowest sight setting regardless of range. Some early Garand
drums have an arrow for the "Battle Sight" setting (275 yards). As I see it, the problem is to make a rifle that is KISS and can be used by the least trained individual and one that has potential for those with more ability. The M1917/P14 "Enfield" had a good set up: ladder down = Battle Sight (~400 yards), up you could go from 200 to 2000 yards. No windage though, but I have found that unless you are NOT being shot at, Kentucky windage is the best. It could have also used a thicker front sight.
Dave
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